Not exact matches
When a beneficiary's grievances
become so serious as to call for an estate trustee's removal and replacement, the matter may require
judicial intervention and may need to be litigated.
Although the homologation process was conceived as a way to guarantee that the international award does not breach public policy or constitutional provisions, prior to its enforcement, it might also
become another layer for
judicial intervention.
Our BC Parental Alienation Lawyers will aggressively pursue
intervention by psychologists, through
judicial interviews of the children and reunification therapy to protect children from
becoming unwitting victims.
Judicial responses to alienation include: ordering an assessment; ordering supervised access on a permanent basis;
intervention in the early stages of the dispute, before the problem has had time to
become «true» alienation, or in the early years of a child's development; changing custody on a temporary basis; determining whether «pure» or «mixed» alienation is taking place; keeping the courts involved; suggesting counselling; making a finding of contempt; making a no - contact order; involving the Children's Aid Society; not making a parallel parenting order; meeting with the children; and in extreme cases, putting the alienating parent's actions on court record, in hopes that if the child revisits the issue as an adult, they may be able to see what actually took place.